I'm moving from Spain to Helsinki this september for a year and I would like to bring my music cds with me. The problem is that I share my cds with my sister, and obviously, she don't want me to remove all my cds from our house for one whole year, so I have been thinking on copying them and bring the copies with me, so she remains with the originals and if, by the way, my luggage is lost I don't loose my originals cds.
My question is if for that, am I going to have problems with the customs or authorities in Finland.
Here in Spain, i believe, exists the right to make your own copies of your original cds. By the way, I'm not talking of one or two cds, but more or less 30 or 40.
Thanks for the help.
About Music cds copies
The law is as stated here..
http://www.helsinginsanomat.fi/english/ ... 1978960379
It is long article so I copy the relevant part.
According to Finnish law it is not illegal to copy films, music, or computer software for one's own use
So if you come here with a few cdroms...they will probalby be judged as being for you own use...But if you come here with several hundred and many are duplicated/triplicated etc. then the customs official might well assume that you are going to sell some.
http://www.helsinginsanomat.fi/english/ ... 1978960379
It is long article so I copy the relevant part.
According to Finnish law it is not illegal to copy films, music, or computer software for one's own use
So if you come here with a few cdroms...they will probalby be judged as being for you own use...But if you come here with several hundred and many are duplicated/triplicated etc. then the customs official might well assume that you are going to sell some.
If a Customs officer gets "pissy"...they can and will always find a way to "confiscate" what-ever..but ...traveling from a EU country to another EU country...nowdays...Customs guys "usually" are busy looking for the like of Phil with a few kilos of white powder and cant be bothered with a few pirated CDs...unless they are bored and happen to stop you for a random check.... then it is just Bad Luck..and bye bye CDroms and whatever..Hank W. wrote:Customs got pissy a few years back and confiscated a number of "car cd's" from people.
Pete's quote was a bit short...Hank W. wrote:<snip>The Estonian Customs got pissy a few years back and confiscated a number of "car cd's" from people.
Estonia has (is?) a major source, or at least route for pirated material. If the Estonian Customs are making an effort to crack down then so be it. If you have copies of commercial CDs in your car, and cannot prove you own a legitimate copy of the original work, then how are they to know otherwise? Not every nation has an "innocent until proven guilty" policy.
Thats a good idea. I suppose if you don't want to be caught with a bunch of CD's (or you just don't want to carry so many) you could condense them onto just a few DVD disks as files and then burn them to individual audio CDs when you arrive. And if you are still paranoid that they will be taken ... label them "family vacation 2001", "trip to Greenland 2003".Penny wrote:We zipped all of ours and burnt them onto just a few dvd's, and posted them just in case.
Penny wrote:We zipped all of ours and burnt them onto just a few dvd's
That's a great idea I didn't think of!!! Thank you all for the ideas. I will burn them on a few dvd's and label them something more spanish, like: "trip to Tenerife 2004" or "camping in Noja"Mookoo wrote:if you are still paranoid that they will be taken ... label them "family vacation 2001", "trip to Greenland 2003".
And, by the way, I'm not paranoid (well, at least not very much ) but had some bad experiences in other trips around Europe.
Hank W. wrote:But importing and exporting them cross borders is a different thing. The Estonian Customs got pissy a few years back and confiscated a number of "car cd's" from people.
Don't worry, I don't plan to cross borders with my cd's, and definetely, not to Estonia. (tell me how am i going to proove I have the original cd if it is in my home in Spain).alloydog wrote:Estonia has (is?) a major source, or at least route for pirated material. If the Estonian Customs are making an effort to crack down then so be it. If you have copies of commercial CDs in your car, and cannot prove you own a legitimate copy of the original work, then how are they to know otherwise? Not every nation has an "innocent until proven guilty" policy.